<div>Sorry I'm a little late reviewing these emails, but now that I'm settled (somewhat) in Lawrence, I want to make sure I didn't miss anything.</div> <div> </div> <div>I take it from this that Biloxi "Kuhi MaNkde," God, must really mean "High Sacred" ? or some such interpretation? I was almost thinking maNkde was related to the positional maNki (lying, reclining) as in "One Reclining Above." (Kind of funny now that I think about it, but that pretty much matches the Christian tradition I think of God being an All-Seer looking down on us from above making sure we behave ourselves. Of course this name probably goes back to long before the arrival of Europeans and Christianity in North America.) Anyway, apparently this word 'maNkde' is also related to the Biloxi word for "snake" aNdesi or ndesi? (Let's see, so (m)aNkdesi which may have been originally (w)aNkdesi? I take it there's often some
correlation/alternation between Biloxi initial m- and initial w- as in mahe or wahe, both meaning 'howl'. I know something like this m/w alternation exists in Hidatsa, and perhaps in other Siouan languages as well?)</div> <div> </div> <div>Anyway, any thoughts are appreciated!</div> <div> </div> <div>Dave</div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div><BR><BR><B><I>"Rankin, Robert L" <rankin@ku.edu></I></B> wrote:</div> <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">The similar words for 'god' and 'snake' are apparently not a coincidence, since in Sac-Fox (I think) Shawnee and Kickapoo the same two terms are also closely related according to Paul Voorhis and Dave Costa, with whom I corresponded about this a long time ago. The Algonquian words are completely different from Siouan /wakhaN/, of course, but 'snake' and 'manitou' are related in at least those Algonquian
languages. So somehow there was evidently a connection seen between snakes and deities at one time. The connection may have been via the Siouan cognate set for 'medicine'. I believe I posted the follow note sometime back. It was in my computer files written in "net Siouan", so it's probably in the list archive. I can't seem to get the file to format properly into columns, but the sets should be obvious.<BR><BR>Bob<BR><BR><BR>The recent discussion of the lexical class of Dakota 'wakhaN' brought to mind a historical comment I recently made in a paper that Giulia Oliverio and I are publishing. It is possible that the nominal status of 'medicine' has affected the status of 'sacred, mysterious', ordinarily a stative verb. <BR><BR>Is it also possible that the root of 'sacred' was just -hkaN and that the wa- nominalized it? Here, in any event are the two cognate sets. <BR><BR>'medicine' 'sacred'<BR><BR>*PSI: *wáN:hka *wahkáN<BR><BR>Dakotan: makhaN wakháN 'spirit,
sacred'<BR><BR>Chiwere: máNkhaN wakháN 'snake' <BR><BR>Winneb: maN:káN wakáN 'snake'<BR><BR>Omaha: maNkkáN wakkáNda 'sacred, god' <BR><BR>Omaha maNkkáN wakkáNdagi 'water monster'<BR><BR>Kansa: mokkáN wakkáNda 'holy, god' <BR><BR>Osage: maNhkáN wahkáNta 'holy, god' <BR><BR>Quapaw: makkáN wakkáNtta 'spirit, god'<BR><BR>*OVS: *muNka 'snake' <BR><BR>Biloxi: n-dé:si 'snake' <BR><BR>Ofo oNktéfi 'snake' <BR><BR>Saponi "moka" 'snake' <BR><BR>In 'medicine' and 'sacred' we have two semantically similar, but derivationally unrelated, roots which, quite by chance, differ only in nasalization and accent placement. Their superficial similarities appear to have led to a certain amount of mixing. The 'medicine' column is where this Ohio Valley Siouan set properly belongs phonologically, but it has undergone the semantic specialization, acquiring the meaning 'snake', that is typical of the 'sacred' set in particular geographical areas. <BR><BR>'Sacred' underwent an exactly parallel change
in Winnebago, Chiwere and Omaha. Here it should be noted that the concepts 'God, sacred' and 'snake' were related in much of the prehistoric eastern and central U.S. Nevertheless, there is identical semantic specialization in all three OVS languages. <BR><BR>Paul Voorhis provided comments on the areal nature of this phenomenon. Voorhis points to similar parallel conflation of 'snake' and 'deity' in Kickapoo. Shawnee maneto is similarly 'snake' (David Costa, personal communication).<BR><BR>Here, as usual, Biloxi and Ofo lose initial labial resonants, while Virginia Siouan keeps them. The -(k)desi portion of the Biloxi and Ofo cognates means 'striped' or 'spotted' and has good cognates throughout Siouan. <BR><BR>________________________________<BR><BR>From: owner-siouan@lists.colorado.edu on behalf of goodtracks@peoplepc.com<BR>Sent: Fri 8/11/2006 9:19 PM<BR>To: Earl Fenner<BR>Cc: siouan@lists.colorado.ed<BR>Subject: <BR><BR><BR><BR>Earl:<BR>I believe I can explain it out
for IOM in regard to the word for "God"/ "Thunders" (in an older traditional application) and the word "snake." There was a Snake Clan, long extinct, which still exists among the Ponca and Winnebago. How would you render an explaination to someone who noted the similarity?<BR>Jimm<BR><BR>[NOTE: Wakánda = God. (It may noted the coincidental similarity of the word - Wakánda - and the word Wakán (snake). The root of both words is "kán-" (holy; sacred; consecrated). This does not infer to some kind of reptile divinity. To the contrary, the term Wakánda is most likely related to the Lakota term, "wakan: holy, mysterious" both sharing the same root of origin]. <BR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR><p>
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